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Ygeor Letov: Father of Russian punk
1. Ygeor Letov: 'Father of Russian 'punk
2. "the father of Russian punk"
"the father of Russian punk"For a Soviet musician thrown into a
mental asylum by the KGB in the mid1980s because of his anti-Communist
lyrics, it was never the best idea, on
release, to sing a song about Lenin
"rotting in his mausoleum". But that is
what the Siberian rocker Yegor Letov did,
and it is partly why he was known as "the
father of Russian punk" and "the Russian
Sid Vicious".
As much as any musicians of the time,
Letov and his cult group Grazhdanskaya
Oborona ("Civil Defence"), widely known
as GrOb – which is also the Russian word
for "coffin" – could claim to have helped
hasten the end of Soviet authoritarianism
with first their niggling, later aggressive,
often obscene and in-your-face defiance
of Communist rule. Their lyrics and music
were raw, direct and anarchic, ushering in
the spirit of fast-changing times.
3. GrOb
Before the Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev eased censorship in
the mid-1980s, which allowed
rock bands to perform openly,
GrOb's anti-Communist lyrics of
rage and desperation were
passed around first Siberia, then
Russia, and eventually the entire
Soviet Union in the form of
home-recorded cassettes known
as magnitizdat. These had a huge
effect on disaffected youth, not
least the song "Some Guy Got
Killed by a Bus". Letov also
performed and recorded with the
band of his then-girlfriend, the
Russian punk Yanka Dyagileva,
until she committed suicide in
1991. He married Natalya
Chumakova, the bass guitarist
with GrOb, in 1997.
4. Ideology
• Ironically, Letov morphed intoan odd blend of Communistnationalist-Christian in postSoviet Russia, a fact that turned
off the newer wave of post-Cold
War musicians. In the early
1990s, he was involved with the
dissident Eduard Limonov in the
founding of the National
Bolshevik Party, since banned,
merging his solo concerts with
its rallies. Despite criticism of his
apparent ideological
turnaround, until shortly before
he died his solo concerts, and
those of GrOb, continued to sell
out.
5. Siberian punkSiberian punk
• Siberia is not the place youfirst think of when you think
of punk music, but that is
where, in 1964, in the city of
Omsk, Igor Fiodorovich Letov
was born to a Russian army
officer and a nurse. He opted
for the first name "Yegor"
when he began playing the
guitar, at first influenced by
western bands on records
passed down to him by his
elder brother Sergei, who
became an avant-garde jazz
saxophonist.